Revel Guest
Revel Sarah Guest[1] OBE (born 14 September 1931 in London) is a filmmaker, journalist, author and farmer and is Chair Emeritus of the Hay Festival. [2]
Early career
A politician's daughter (her father, Oscar Guest and his three brothers served as MPs with their cousin, Sir Winston Churchill), she was educated at Bedgebery School and the London School of Economics. After working as a secretary for Jo Grimond in the House of Commons, she stood as the then youngest ever female Conservative parliamentary candidate (for Swansea East) in the 1955 election. She then became assistant editor of Lady Rhondda's Time and Tide and in 1957 left to become press officer for the UK Council of the European Movement and later wrote a syndicated column from America for the Westminster Press.
Cinema and television
In 1960 Guest joined the BBC’s Panorama and became its first female producer/director, working with Richard Dimbleby, Robin Day and John Morgan, making major programmes on domestic issues and international affairs before moving on to direct and produce a series of profiles of major political leaders including Hugh Gaitskell, Harold Macmillan and Edward Heath.
She left the BBC in 1966 to become Head of the European Bureau of the Ford Foundation's two-year experiment in US public broadcasting, Public Broadcasting Laboratory - which led to the creation of PBS - and in 1968 she formed Transatlantic Films, the first truly independent documentary film company to co-produce quality films for the international television market.
Transatlantic films
Since its creation over 50 years ago, Transatlantic has produced more than one hundred and fifty films and series, working in co-production with the BBC, Channel 4 and other major UK broadcasters, as well as with leading TV networks in the United States, Canada, Australia and Europe – Discovery Channel, TLC, Animal Planet, A&E, Group W, Metromedia, PBS, ABC, TVNZ, TF1, La Cinquième, NDR and ORF etc.
Direction and production
Guest's directing and producing credits include: London Rock and Black, White and Blues, co-productions with the BBC and Metromedia; In Search of Paradise, a co-production with TF1 in France, Channel 4 in the UK and TVOntario in Canada; 4 American Composers, a series of four one-hour films directed by Peter Greenaway; Plácido Domingo, A Year in the Life of an Opera Singer, also for Channel 4. Then followed three major award-winning series: The Horse in Sport (8 x 50'), Greek Fire 90 x 25'), and History's Turning Points, a 26 part series which won the Prix de Basle, Barcelona Bienale for Culture and the Prix Stendhal.
Trailblazers (26 x 50') was the highest-rated series on the Travel Channel in the US, a co-production with Discovery Channel Europe. Horse Tales(26 x 25') was the first UK/Canadian Treaty Co-Production of a factual television documentary series. Three Gorges (2 x 60') was an acclaimed documentary on the construction and completion of the largest dam in the world along with the efforts of the Chinese government to save their antiquities from the rising waters. The Science of Love (3x60'), Extreme Body Parts(6 x 60') and Sleep and Dreams (2 x 60') were all co-produced with Discovery Health in the United States, Great North and Alliance Atlantis in Canada, S4C in Wales and NDR in Germany. Legends of the Living Dead (4 x 50') was a co-production with the Travel Channel, S4C and S4C International and most recently, she co-produced Return to the Three Gorges (1 x 90') a Discovery Channel special made in co-production with West Beach Productions.
Her drama credits include producing and directing Man in a Fog for Channel 4, a psychological drama starring Tim Piggot Smith, and later produced Belzoni, a three-part drama series, also for Channel 4. Her feature film Makin' it, directed by Simon Hartog, was chosen as the British entry for the Director Fortnight at Cannes Film Festival in 1972. More recently she was Executive Producer of the BAFTA and The Oscar nominated 2011 feature film, War Horse (film), directed by Steven Spielberg.
Guest was also Executive Producer of "Covent Garden Pioneer" - a joint venture between the Royal Opera House and the Japanese electronic company, Pioneer. During this time she produced fifteen full-length opera and ballet productions from Covent Garden in co-production with the BBC, Channel 4 and NHK.
Literature
Guest has co-authored two books and has been Chair of the Hay Festival for over twenty years, and is now Chair Emeritus.
Personal life
Guest is married to American international lawyer Robert Albert and they live and farm in Wales, where she also was MFH of the Golden Valley and bred and trained event horses with Lesley Law. She has two children, Justin, currently Director for Wales of the National Trust, and Corisande, writer, potter and managing partner of the family farm, Cabalva
References
- "New Year's Honours 2018" (PDF). Gov.uk. Government Digital Service. 29 December 2017. p. 29. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
- New Statesman
- Mosley, Charles (2003). Burke's Peerage Baronetage & Knightage. The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-9711966-2-9
- Sefton, Daniel (2007). Debrett’s People of Today. DeBrett's Ltd. ISBN 978-1-870520-95-9
- Guest, Revel and St George, Andrew (1995). History’s Turning Points. Boxtree Limited. ISBN 1-85283-958-9
- Guest, Revel and John, Angela (1989). Lady Charlotte Guest. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-7524-4252-5